posted on 2024-07-12, 22:43authored byDeirdre Barron, Margaret Zeegers
It examines two processes in a number of Australian universities postgraduate divisions' practices in compilation of postgraduate supervisor registers – how people get onto the register, and how people get off it. It takes issue with the reliance on custom and tradition as a dominant practice of registration and/or deregistration for supervision of postgraduate research studies. It suggests a model of supervisor registration and deregistration as intentional and systematic intervention, based on literature deriving from research in postgraduate supervision which acknowledges the problematic natures of relationships between teaching, learning and knowledge production. In doing so, it examines issues of discursive practice and the problematic nature of power differentials in supervisor/supervisee relationships and the possibilities presented by both registration and deregistration for such relationships.
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Journal title
Proceedings of the 10th International Literacy and Education Research Network Conference on Learning, Institute of Education, University of London, England, 15-18 July 2003
Conference name
The 10th International Literacy and Education Research Network Conference on Learning, Institute of Education, University of London, England, 15-18 July 2003